Bottom line: LeEco’s smartphones will have difficulty finding a major audience over the next 2 years due to technical problems and poor after-sales service, making it hard to meet its aggressive targets.
An investigative report on the year-old smartphone business of online video superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) is showing how the company’s dreams of quickly becoming a major player in the crowded space might be more difficult than it realizes. Specifically, the report in the respected Yangtse Evening News is spotlighting major shortcomings in LeEco’s after-sales service, a critical link for its smartphones that are facing inevitable technical problems due to their newness.
I’ve been a LeEco smartphone skeptic for a while now, so perhaps some readers may think I’m biased in spotlighting this particular problem that all new companies face when rolling out a major new product. But the reality is that in all my years of using older cellphones and newer smartphones, never once have I owned a model that didn’t have a major problem at least once that required me to take it to a repair shop. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi could launch in the US within the next 12 months and benefit from its recent tie-up with Microsoft, but it will face a big uphill battle due to stiff competition, lack of name recognition and unexciting models.
Following several recent false starts, fading Chinese smartphone sensation Xiaomiis saying it’s aiming to enter the tough US market soon. We’ve heard similar talk before, and at one time such a move would have been quite exciting and controversial when some were comparing Xiaomi to a China’s homegrown answer to Apple (Nasadq: AAPL). But Xiaomi’s star has faded considerably over the last year, partly due to intense competition in China but just as much due to a reputation for shoddy quality and unexciting phones. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple’s announcement of its first China R&D center looks like a hastily crafted initiative aimed at generating positive publicity, but is unlikely to halt its recent slide in the market.
Just a day after new data showed just how badly Apple(Nasdaq: AAPL) is stumbling in China, the iPhone maker has finally taken a step it should have made long ago with the announcement that it will build an R&D center in the country. Apple’s hesitation over such a move has been quite embarrassing, especially since China has surged to become its second largest market in the last 3 years. The lack of such investment is also embarrassing for China because India, a much smaller market for Apple, became the first Asian recipient of an R&D center from the US tech giant earlier this year. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lei Jun’s resignation as YY chairman to focus on his struggling Xiaomi reflects his own fading star power, while Huawei is unlikely to reach its goal of taking 10 percent of the India smartphone market by the end of next year.
A couple of smartphone stories are in the headlines on this final day of the work week, capping a flurry of industry news that reflects the turmoil in China’s overheated market. Both items are relatively second-tier news, led by the resignation of Lei Jun from his position as chairman of social networking site YY (Nasdaq: YY) to focus on reviving his ailing Xiaomi smartphone empire. The other item has market leader Huawei hyping India, where it is getting set to launch a manufacturing facility and has ambitious plans for taking 10 percent of the market. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Lenovo’s latest results show a company in transition as it overhauls its struggling smartphone business, and could presage a fledgling turnaround as it focuses on mid-range models with its young Zuk brand.
Newly released quarterly results from the struggling Lenovo (HKEx: 992) are showing some early positive signs, as the company seeks to turn around its miserably performing smartphone business. Lenovo stumbled badly in smartphones, which will play a vital role in its future as its older PC business rapidly matures. The company bet heavily on cheap, low-end models that initially gained big market share, especially in its home market, but then later fizzled due to lack of brand recognition and a reputation for poor quality. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Rumors of a LeEco purchase of Smartisan are probably true as the company seeks a wealthy backer to continue funding its operations, and a deal could be announced in the next 2 months.
Rumors surrounding a possible sale of the uppity Smartisan smartphone brand are rippling through the headlines today, providing some lively entertainment in the overheated sector. This particular story is drawing attention mostly due to Smartisan’s founder, the slightly pretentious Luo Yonghao, who was trying to parlay his success as China’s best-known English teacher into a smartphone brand. But Luo’s plan hasn’t materialized quite the way he imagined, and Smartisan is often rumored to be doing quite poorly and losing big money. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeEco and Coolpad could see a brief surge in smartphone sales due to strong promotional efforts, but will rapidly fade when consumers realize its models are the same as many other products on the market.
Just a day after the release of new data showing the surging Oppo was close to stealing China’s smartphone crown from a stumbling Huawei, sector newcomer and online video superstar LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) is talking up new sales targets that imply it believes it can win the title as soon as next year. That’s quite big talk for a company that only entered the smartphone business last year and has never finished among the top 5 vendors for China. But LeEco CEO Jia Yueting has never been afraid of making such bold predictions, following a Chinese tradition that has seen similar big talk come from most of the nation’s other major smartphone makers. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: The latest quarterly smartphone data show Oppo could soon take China’s smartphone crown from Huawei, whose rapidly slowing sales could cause it to badly miss its 2016 target.
Recent trends in China’s fiercely competitive smartphone market are accelerating in the latest quarterly data, led by a plunge in sales and market share for Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and sharply slowing growth for local leader Huawei. At the same time, the surging Oppo continues its meteoric rise to cement its position as China’s second largest smartphone maker, as it closes in on Huawei.
All that said, the smartphone crown for China, the world’s biggest market, is shaping up to be quite a hot potato that changes hands often. Just 3 years ago that title belonged to Samsung (Seoul: 005930), which was later supplanted by Xiaomi, a former superstar that barely made the top 5 in the newly released second-quarter rankings from IDC. (press release) Apple has also briefly held the title, only to be overtaken last year by current leader Huawei. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: LeEco’s rescue plan for Coolpad will fail due to stiff competition in China’s smartphone markets and overly ambitious targets for its own new line of smartphones.
Less than 2 months after becoming the largest stakeholder of Coolpad (HKEx: 2369), online video sensation LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) is wasting no time in making major changes at the struggling smartphone maker. The most symbolic of those has LeEco’s dynamic founder Jia Yueting ousting Coolpad’s chairman and CEO and taking over the chairman’s position for himself. More substantially, LeEco is indicating it will become Coolpad’s largest customer going forward as part of its own plans to build an entertainment ecosystem around devices like Internet-connected smartphones, TVs and cars. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Apple’s cleanup of its China app store reflects the deceptive marketing that often occurs on the Chinese Internet, and also Apple’s more transparent approach towards its actions in China.
iPhone users in China are discovering a new look at Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) local app store, following the removal of more than 10,000 apps over a one-day period late last week. App store users first noticed something unusual when it appeared that the popular news app called Jinri Toutiao, or Today’s Headlines, suddenly seemed to disappear from Apple’s China store. But further examination showed that Apple was simply removing redundant versions of the app, many of which had very similar names and identical appearances. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Qualcomm’s new licensing deal with Oppo extends a recent upbeat trend for the company in China after a yearlong retrenchment, and will be followed by more similar deals through the rest of this year.
Following a difficult year in China that saw it fined a record amount for anti-competitive behavior, global telecoms chip leader Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) appears to be slowing regaining its footing in the world’s largest smartphone market. That’s my interpretation of the latest headline, which has the company announcing a new chip licensing deal with Oppo, one of the market’s fastest growing smartphone makers. Word of this latest deal almost certainly came from Qualcomm itself, which is eager to show its days of trouble in China are in the past. Read Full Post…